JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/32066
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Hobara, Norio| Watanabe, Akiharu|
Abstract

The disappearance rates(K) of FT-207 from the blood in patients with primary hepatoma and advanced cirrhosis of the liver were significantly lower than those in control patients with cancer but normal liver function. Pretreatment with tocopheryl nicotinate and indomethacin increased the K values in the control subjects, but was without effect on the K values in patients with primary hepatoma.

Keywords FT-207 disappearance rate hepatoma liver cirrhosis tocophery1 nicotinate indomethacin
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1979-10
Volume volume33
Issue issue5
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 389
End Page 393
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 229696
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/32065
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Miyazaki, Masahiro| Watanabe, Akiharu| Syarifuddin, Wahid| Tsunashima, Masakazu| Sato, Jiro|
Abstract

Albumin was highly purified from a commercially available rat albumin preparation (Fraction V) using disc electrophoresis. The purified albumin had the same antigenicity as Fraction V. A monospecific anti-rat albumin rabbit serum was obtained. The antiserum was used in a double antibody quantitative method for determining rat albumin.

Keywords rat albumin anti-rat albumin antiserum radioimmunoassay double antibody method
Amo Type Brief Note
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1979-10
Volume volume33
Issue issue5
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 409
End Page 413
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 160188
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/32064
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Watanabe, Makoto|
Abstract

The alterations of lipid composition in sera of patients with liver diseases, particularly intrahepatic cholestasis and biliary obstruction, were studied by ultracentrifugation and polyacrylamide-gel disc-electrophoresis of lipoproteins and apoproteins. The elevation of serum cholesterol in intrahepatic cholestasis was greater than in biliary obstruction. The appearance of lipoprotein X in obstructive disease accounted for most of the increased cholesterol. The level of non-lipoprotein X cholesterol in intrahepatic cholestasis was significantly elevated, this being in part ascribed to the appearance of a new class of cholestatic lipoprotein, Slow-migrating HDL. The electrophoretic pattern of lipoprotein in cholestasis was generally characterized by a decrease in alpha band intensity and, in some types of cholestasis, by the appearance of Slow-migrating HDL. In addition, other abnormal lipoproteins exhibiting the characteristics of triglyceride-rich LDL (LP-Y), LP-X-like HDL and LDL-like HDL were found in some cases of intrahepatic cholestasis and biliary obstruction.

Keywords intrahepatic cholestasis primary biliary cirrhosis polyacrylamide-gel disc-electrophoresis high density lipoprotein Slow-migrating HDL(HDL-S)
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1979-10
Volume volume33
Issue issue5
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 269
End Page 285
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 227230
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/32063
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Neya, Toshiaki| Takai, Miyako| Nakayama, Sosogu|
Abstract

The effect of subdiaphragmatic vagotomy on food intake and defecation was studied in guinea pigs. Weights of food and feces were measured for at least three weeks after vagotomy. The weight of daily food intake and feces evacuated increased about 15 and 30% after vagotomy compared with controls whereas it did not change in sham operated animals. The weight of scybalum decreased after vagotomy although the number increased markedly. It was considered that an increase in food intake after vagotomy may result from blocking of satiety signals mediated by the vagus; moreover, that the increase in feces may depend on the enhancement of scybalum formation in the proximal colon resulting from increasing food intake and transportation of the larger amount of the contents after vagotomy.

Keywords vagotomy food intake defecation
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1979-10
Volume volume33
Issue issue5
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 371
End Page 377
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 160184
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/32062
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Tanaka, Toshio| Sezaki, Tatsuo| Hujita, Mineji| Oka, Akira| Okamoto, Tsukasa| Ito, Jishu|
Abstract

A total of 45 cases of multiple myeloma has been followed up clinically during the period from 7 to 80 months. Out of these, six patients (13.3%) were diagnosed to be the tumor-forming type; they developed discrete tumor formation at the disease onset or during clinical observation. Biological behavior of these cases is briefly outlined. Histologically, five cases presented with well or moderately well differentiated plasma cells according to the grading made by Pasmantier and Azar. The remaining one case was poorly differentiated in cell maturity, and with electron and immunofluorescence microscopies, proved to be of plasmacytic nature.

Keywords tomor-forming tupe multiple myeloma
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1979-10
Volume volume33
Issue issue5
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 359
End Page 370
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 160183
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/32061
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Miyake, Shu|
Abstract

Serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase (GOT), mitochondrial GOT (GOTm), glutamic-pyruvic transaminase (GPT) and glutamate dehydrogenase activities were determined in 43 healthy controls and in 280 cases of liver diseases. A simplified column chromatographic method coupled with UV assay was employed for separation of GOTm. The activity was measured by following decrease in abosrbance of NADH at 340 nm. The lowest activity of GOTm determined with a coefficient of variation below 10% was 6 mIU/ml. High GOTm activities were found in acute hepatitis (acute stage), subacute hepatitis and primary biliary cirrhosis and were generally associated with high total GOT (GOTt) activities. The activity ratio of GOTm/GOTt varied depending on the stage and severity of liver diseases. The GOTm/GOTt ratio was decreased in acute, fulminant and subacute hepatitides. No significant reduction in the ratio was found in bile duct obstruction, alcoholic liver injury or metastatic liver cancer. Although relatively high GOTm/GOTt ratios were found in some patients with severe hepatic injury, they had no definite association with poor prognosis. These results indicate that the marked elevation in GOTt over GPT in advanced chronic hepatitis, liver cirrhosis and primary hepatoma was mainly due to preferential leakage of cytoplasmic GOT (GOTs).

Keywords glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminanse glutamic-pyruvic transaminase ratio glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase isoenzyme enzyne leakage liver enzyme enzyme dedifferentiation liver diseases
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1979-10
Volume volume33
Issue issue5
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 287
End Page 304
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 227231
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/32060
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Hamazaki, Yukio| Murao, Tsuyoshi|
Abstract

Combined inoculation of a cell-free extract of leukotic tissue of D103 mice and Salmonella typhimurium into adult Swiss mice induced leukosis and solid tumors. The induced solid tumors were histologically multifarious, and were transplantable in Swiss mice, but not in other strains of mice.

Keywords tumor cell-free extract salmonella
Amo Type Brief Note
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1979-10
Volume volume33
Issue issue5
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 405
End Page 407
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 160187
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/32059
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Nakagawa, Masahiro| Saito, Daiji| Ueda, Minoru| Yoshida, Hidenori| Mae, Ritsuo| Ioriya, Kazuo| Haraoka, Shoichi|
Abstract

Vectorcardiogram (VCG) recorded by both the Frank and Kimura systems were examined in 45 patients with complete right bundle branch block (RBBB) and left axis deviation (LAD) to investigate the relationship seen on electrocardiogram (ECG) between RBBB with LAD and bilateral bundle. The sample included: 13 cases of type SI, SII, SIII, SaVF; 21 cases of type SI, SII, SIII, aVF; and 11 cases of types SI, SII, SIII. VCG recorded by the Frank system were classified into seven types according to the QRS loop pattern on the frontal plane and into three types according to the horizontal plane. The main findings were: (a) In the Frank system the QRS loop in the frontal plane showed a variety of patterns in RBBB with LAD. (b) On VCG of complete RBBB judged complicated by a left anterior hemiblock by the Frank system, the main portion of the QRS loop extended to the left superior or merely to the left in the frontal plane. The direction of rotation and position on the horizontal plane were not consistent. (c) The results of this study suggest the usefulness of the Kimura system as an auxiliary diagnostic technique.

Keywords right bundle branch block left axis deviation bilateral bundle branch block vectorcardiography Frank system Kimura system
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1979-10
Volume volume33
Issue issue5
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 395
End Page 404
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 160186